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    Irving Reis
    An image from The Hollywood Revue of 1929, one of the productions that also features Irving Reis.
    Irving Reis

    Irving Reis

    May 7, 1906 — New York City, New York, USA

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Irving Reis, (born May 7, 1906, in New York City – died July 3, 1953, in Woodland Hills, California) was a radio program producer and director, and a film director.

    Irving Reis was born into a Jewish family.

    Reis began his career as a motion picture photographer. The most notable of his screen efforts was being one of the photographers for The Hollywood Revue of 1929.

    A 1931 notice in Variety declared that he was transitioning into a playwright. By 1933, Variety took notice of his radio play St. Louis Blues. His radio play Meridian 7-1212 first broadcast on January 24, 1935, received an "above par" comment from Variety. Observing that he wrote and produced the play, the unnamed reviewer noted the numerous radio effects, and that compared to his two previous radio plays, this was the best.

    Reis was the creator of Columbia Workshop, the experimental anthology program on the radio, and its initial broadcast took place on July 18, 1936.

    Reis departed for Hollywood on January 1, 1938 where he became a scriptwriter for Paramount Pictures. In November 1939, Variety announced that Reis would be taking 10 weeks off from his script writing at Paramount to study film direction.

    In February 1940, Variety announced that Reis had left Paramount to begin directing at RKO Pictures. Among his motion picture credits are Enchantment, Roseanna McCoy, The Big Street, and the screen adaptation of Arthur Miller's play All My Sons (1948). Reis also directed the movie The Four Poster, based on Jan de Hartog's play The Fourposter.

    Reis married Meta Arenson in Tijuana on August 10, 1938.

    He died leaving his wife and three children. Reis is buried in the Jewish Cemetery Hillside Memorial Park.

    The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer

    The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer

    1947

    All My Sons

    All My Sons

    1948

    Crack-Up

    Crack-Up

    1946

    The Falcon Takes Over

    The Falcon Takes Over

    1942

    The Hollywood Revue of 1929

    The Hollywood Revue of 1929

    1929

    The Gay Falcon

    The Gay Falcon

    1941

    The Big Street

    The Big Street

    1942

    A Date with the Falcon

    A Date with the Falcon

    1942